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Displaying 1—10 of 1000 matches for query "A._A._Blagonravov" retrieved in 0.012 sec with these stats:

  • "a" found 169938 times in 18149 documents
  • "blagonravov" found 83 times in 60 documents



Media:Lomanov RU2116942.pdf Space station Patent RU2116942 Category:Publications Category:Patent
Media:US2936969.pdf Jet Sustained and propelled aircraft Patent US-2936969 Media:US3073549.pdf Jet lift Vertical Take-off aircraft Patent US-3073549 Category:Publications Category:Patent
... your general duties and responsibilities there at the laboratory in Cleveland? '''Armstrong:''' A dual job as a research pilot and a research engineer. Actually, I think at that point they called them research ... immediate new concerns would somebody like yourself have, let's just say that you're a pilot, a top-flight pilot would have about leaving Earth's immediate gravitational influence? What would ...
... time? '''Biggs:''' Guache was the favorite medium then which is watercolor in a tube, and a lot of pencil drawings, a lot of illustrations. Like I say, not only full-color illustrations for ... later they just called it public affairs commentator. Well, the public affairs commentator needed a mechanical person, a person to talk to the media, “Okay, ten seconds, we’ll be releasing audio ... well. But I had nothing directly to do with that. '''Wright:''' Apollo-Soyuz was a bit of a different program for everybody. '''Biggs:''' It was. For me, Apollo-Soyuz really started in ...
... , and if he could relieve the pressure by an endolymphatic shunt, he could drill a hole, take a little plastic tube, and put it into the saccule, which is at the base ... , and we want you to write us an answer for it." So they sent a courier with a letter. Interruption I'm sorry. We were with Al. '''Butler:''' We were talking about ... that we went through, you know that we opened the spacecraft and we had a swimmer in a biological isolation garment go up to the door, but we opened that door and ...
... is mesmerized. He can't say anything. The dust is gone. It's a realization, a reality, all of a sudden you have just landed in another world on another body out there ... where you develop recognition, then eventually if you're there long enough people attach a name to a face. Eventually they'll remember what the hell you did. But that's why ... , doing what they thought was the right thing to do. That would have been a hell of a group of people to put together, wouldn't it? '''Wright:''' Just the decision-making ...
... suit development. His deputy was Richard H. Johnston, Dick Johnston, who had worked as a civilian at a Navy research facility where they were doing pressure suit development for Navy flyers. As ... the telemetry bandwidth that biomedical data occupied because getting it down from a spacecraft did take a lot of bandwidth, a lot of energy that they could have used for other scientific goals ...
... in the secretary’s office outside his office. So I sort of looked like a secretary without a typewriter, but I did get started on the training program. But I think it ... . I read it. They assigned me to it, because the solution was to get a computer, write a program, and give them more representative information. So since I had just arrived with ... , training flight controllers. But there were some changes at that time, and there was a reorganization at a couple of levels, and one was they rearranged the two directorates. So they had ...
... tell me? I don’t know. Then I ended up being able to be a partner with a great mentor and learning so much from him. It was great to be able ... had the sheet to pick from if we got better. The ACOs, they develop a contingency Channel A activation flowchart that goes along with our contingency timeline. So the crew has the ... closely with them, but we don’t actually get trained in that. We also have a MATS, a timeline, and an OCA. Sometimes we have two MATS, because the replan shift is ...
... in March 1955. Here the Los Alamos National Laboratory argued a ground launch of a nuclear rocket lacked a payload advantage, but boosting a nuclear stage to 50,000 feet, where it then fired ... and inexpensively – remember it took only 19 months - and it will progress quickly from a first to a second, third and fourth generation system. No real new R&D has to be ... -scale nuclear power plant. This small size should make it easy to secure in a fixed site, a definite plus with worries over terrorism. The high temperature gives greater efficiency in producing ...

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